Snack Time with NASA: Space Salad
Narration:
Transcript:
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What do I do with my hands, OK?
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[UPBEAT MUSIC]
Hey everyone, welcome to Snack Time with NASA.
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I'm your host, Kathleen Gaeta.
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Now, we've been exploring all the ways that NASA helps
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get some of your favorite foods onto your plate.
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And so far, all of those foods have been down here on Earth, obviously.
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But we're NASA, right?
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So while we may not be professional chefs,
we do know a thing or two about space.
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That's why today we'll be learning
what it takes to grow food
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two hundred miles above our heads
onboard the International Space Station.
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And later, we'll hear
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how the space station helps us monitor
the health of plants down here on Earth.
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So let's get into it.
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As you can see, I have a nice haul of greens right in front of me.
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Some romaine lettuce, some bok choy, radishes, micro greens.
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Now, I got all these ingredients for my local grocery store.
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But actually, every single one of these plants is grown onboard the ISS.
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And here to help explain how that happens is Matt Romeyn, Project Scientist
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at the Kennedy Space Center. Matt, thank you so much for being here.
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How's it going?
Matt: Oh it's going good, glad to be here Kathleen.
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Kathleen: So you sent me a list of vegetables that you work with,
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and I'm wondering how you go about choosing
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which foods to grow up in space?
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Matt: We have to do a lot of crop screening. We're able to screen these crops and test them at our growth chambers
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at Kennedy Space Center that are able to replicate the environmental conditions
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on the International Space Station, except for microgravity.
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We're looking for how productive they grow, growth for compact
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morphologies and crops that are nutritious and flavorful.
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Kathleen: OK, I have to ask, have you ever grown potatoes in space?
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Matt: Well, we've been growing crops recently on ISIS - last five years or so.
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We haven't had potatoes recently, but in the past we've done them
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on the shuttle program
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and we have grown them extensively on the ground at Kennedy Space Center.
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Kathleen: I will eat a space potato in my lifetime, I promise you that.
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Anyways, so you suggested I pick up some bok choy and mustard
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greens, and I can't say those are typical salad ingredients for myself.
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Matt: The bok choy is interesting because the crew recently
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grew and got to eat that on the ISS and they really enjoyed it.
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They actually found a way to cook it, using their food warmer
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and combining some garlic paste, soy sauce, and bit of olive oil.
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The mustard greens are great because they have a lot of strong flavors.
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And when you're an astronaut on the ISS, with the microgravity,
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you have a diminished sense of taste and smell.
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So they like those bolder flavors that kind of punch through there.
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Kathleen: Wow. I did not know that.
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And now, do you also grow the same plants
that you're growing in space down at KSC?
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Matt: Yeah, well, we're growing plants in space on ISS, we also have ground controls
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at KSC that
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replicate the exact conditions on the ISS - the temperature, humidity, the CO2
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levels, we can control for everything but the microgravity element.
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Kathleen: Ok, and I assume that so that you can more closely monitor
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the difference of plants growing in space versus on Earth.
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What have you discovered in that process?
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Matt: Well, we find that plants, for the most part,
grow similar in space as on Earth.
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A big variable is the water.
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There's a lack of convective
flow in space, and that makes water very
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sticky. Plants like a good mix of water
and oxygen in their root zone.
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And when we have water that doesn't mix well with
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oxygen, we get a lot of swinging back and forth between
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the roots being flooded and being in a state of drought.
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We have technologies that are working on that.
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To solve that problem of microgravity.
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Luckily, when we get to Mars and the moon,
those problems mostly go away.
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Kathleen: Got it. And so talk to me about this little space garden
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I keep hearing of - the VEGGIE Growth System. What is that?
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Yeah, the VEGGIE. We've got two of those on ISS,
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And it's a real simple system.
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It's about the size of a piece of carry-on luggage.
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It uses LED lighting and has six little plant pillows in there
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that are filled with growth medium, which is basically a soil substitute.
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And that's how we're able to grow and propagate the plants on the ISS.
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Kathleen: That's so interesting.
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The vision of a space garden just brings a lot of joy to me
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and I'm sure a lot of people.
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Anyway, so is there a plant that you're kind of the most excited
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about trying to grow in space?
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Matt: Definitely peppers.
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We actually just sent chili peppers to ISIS,
that will be grown in the summer,
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and we're excited about peppers
because they are very challenging.
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They take a long time to germinate.
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They take a long time to grow, about 120 days.
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And there's a real challenge with the flavor.
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If we were to overwater them, they taste
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like grass clippings. If we under water,
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and we stress out a lot, they're really spicy.
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So we're trying to really control to grow healthy plants
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and flavorful plants that the crew wants to eat and enjoy.
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Kathleen: Right. And you know what they say,
if you can't take the heat,
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get off the space station, right?
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Just kidding, that's my dad joke of the day!
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Well anyways, Matt I can't thank you enough for being here.
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[Bark] I learned a lot, and I hope you all did as well.
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And I can't wait to hear what you grow in space next!
Matt: Thank you.
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[Bark] Kathleen: Shut your little door, Buoy
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So now that we know more about crops
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aboard the space station, what about the crops
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we study from the space station that live down here on Earth?
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And for that, Christine Lee, Applications Lead for the ECOSTRESS
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mission is here to talk to us.
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Hey, Christine, thank you for being here.
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Christine: Hi. Thank you. Glad to be here.
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I was just talking with Matt about how the VEGGIE Lab on
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the ISS helps us better understand how plants grow in microgravity.
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And that's inspired all of the ingredients here for the salad.
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But I also know that instruments
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on the ISS help us better understand how plants grow down on Earth.
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I'm wondering how that is?
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Christine: Well, the instrument and projects that I work on, the Ecosystem Spaceborne
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Thermal Radiometer Experiment on Space Station, also known as ECOSTRESS,
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collects thermal data from on board the International Space Station.
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And we use this thermal data
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to better understand vegetation water stress here on Earth.
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And so we can apply this data in understanding crop water stress,
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looking at drought across forests
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in climate-vulnerable areas all around the world.
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Kathleen: And so I know that we also look at the temperature of plants.
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And I can't say I know why we do that?
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Christine: We look at the temperature of plants because
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plants contain a lot of water.
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It's part of their process for photosynthesizing.
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And the temperature is directly
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related to the water content within those plants.
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And so the hotter a plant gets, we can use that as an indicator of how
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how healthy that particular plant is.
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Kathleen: Got it. OK, so all this data is captured and collected.
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Who then uses it?
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Christine: Well, we have a wide variety of partners.
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One of our key partners is the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
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They utilize the data to better understand crop water stress across
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different areas, primarily in the continental United States.
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And they use this to understand and inform decisions
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like irrigation and water management, as well as the onset of drought.
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Kathleen: And so what advantages does ECOSTRESS get being on the ISS?
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Christine: We love being on the International Space Station.
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One of the really unique aspects of being on the ISIS
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is that there's a variable overpass time.
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And what that means is that instead of taking measurements at the same time,
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during each overpass, the way we might with other polar
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orbiting satellite missions, is that we actually get to take a snapshot
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of temperatures and water stress at different times of day.
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And what this then translates to
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is being able to look at the peak of vegetation water stress,
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which typically occurs in the mid to late afternoon.
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This is something that has not been done before.
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And being able to create this daily cycle of water stress
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for vegetation at these spatial and temporal scales.
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Kathleen: Well, it seems to me that instruments onboard the ISS are pretty crucial
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when it comes to monitoring our human caused climate change.
[DOG BARK]
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Climate change is bad.
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Christine: Yes, so the really great thing about ECOSTRESS is that it
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complements these other instruments and other satellites like Landsat,
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to create a continuous long-term record of the Earth system.
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And right now, NASA is working on future missions that will build on these records
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to provide climate scientists a holistic view of the Earth.
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This provides us really unique insights to how vegetation
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and forests around the world are reacting to environmental and climate stressors.
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Kathleen: Well, you know, it's amazing to hear about all the science
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that goes into growing plants both in space and on Earth.
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And on that note, I'm ready to appreciate some of that science
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by digging into this salad. Christine, thank you so much for being here.
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I really appreciate it!
And thank you all for watching. Cheers!
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[DOG BARKING]
You want salad?